“She manages to trap me”: upset, Franck Dubosc breaks down in Quelle Époque on 2 (VIDEO)

“She manages to trap me”: upset, Franck Dubosc breaks down in Quelle Époque on 2 (VIDEO)
“She manages to trap me”: upset, Franck Dubosc breaks down in Quelle Époque on France 2 (VIDEO)

This week, the traditional poem by Charlotte Dhénaux was dedicated to Franck Dubosc in What an era! on 2. Léa Salamé’s columnist arrived on the set in summer outfit, in the shoes of a character from her imagination: Nathalie Sarkozy, director of the Flots-Bleus campsite made famous by the saga Camping worn by the actor.

The life of Franck Dubosc recounted by columnist Charlotte Dhénaux

Then, accompanied by a piano, Charlotte Dhénaux changed her tone to pay tribute to the director whose new film Un ours dans le jura is currently a success at the cinema. From the westerns that he shot with his Super 8 in his youth, to his theater teacher and then his life in England, the columnist left nothing aside. Franck Dubosc’s daily life as well as the painful loss of his parents were also discussed: “You learn your lyrics at breakfast with your children. (…) You think of your father every time you go on stage, of those last glances exchanged on the balcony, like a refrain. Freed from Charcot, he knows you succeeded. You feed on this pride, in his memory. (…) What you miss is the phone call to your mother on Sunday evening. Certain reflexes are not erased in the repertoire. (…) You prefer the future to the past, so as not to be disappointed“.

Franck Dubosc upset in What an era!he reacts

In tears, the comedian then listened to Charlotte Dhénaux launch into a very intimate analysis of her personality: “Sometimes we show what others want to see, as if our self-esteem depended on their mirror“. Once the poem was finished, Franck Dubosc dried his tears then warmly thanked the columnist by taking her in his arms. He then shared his feelings with Léa Salamé: “Every time I watch the show, I see everyone getting pranked. We listen, it’s pretty and we say to ourselves, all these little things… The fact that it makes you cry, there’s a bit… Not self-satisfaction, but… We listen to our own life on little moments and she manages to trap me. For me, it’s not necessarily the moments we look forward to the most that trapped me there. What she writes is lovely. (…) I watch you on Saturday evening and I find it very beautiful, the work she does“.

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